PAGE TWO Troubadour to Parade By CAROLE GIBSON PS Troubadour, undoubt edly in all his glory, will return to campus tonight as “grand marshall” of a par ade to open the 40th annual Little International Livestock Show. Troubadour, the University's international grand champion steer, will parade through Uni versity Park and State College with other livestock. The parade will form at 6 tonight at the sheep barn, pro ceed down Shortlidge Rd.. up College Ave., up Burrowes Rd., and down Pollock Rd. The Little International Livestock Show will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 pjn. tomorrow in the Livestock Pavillion. Troubadour, who has just finished a national tour, could be termed a nationaUy-famous 39 Will Participate In He-Man Prelims Thirty-nine men will partici pate in the He-Man contest pre- at 2 p.m. Sunday at Beaver Field. • The 10 men with the highest combined scores in the prelimi nary events will qualify for the finals to be held at 7 pm. Wed nesday on Beaver Field. The preliminary events will be the 100-yard dash and the shot put. Spikes may not be used. In case of rain the prelimi naries will be held in Recreation Hall and will include a three lap track event and a weight lifting event, the bench press. Judges for the contest will be members of the Varsity “S” Club. The winner of the He-Man contest will receive 15 points toward Spring Week for his spon soring group. The second place winner will receive 10 points for his group, the third place win ner seven points and the five finalists five points. Each group will receive one point for enter ing a contestant. The 39 preliminary contestants are Robert Metzger, Phi Kappa Psi; Samuel Valentine. Sigma Phi Epsilon; Francis Paolone, Theta Chi; Raymond Pottios, Theta Delta Chi; Richard Poust, Glee Club, To Present The Men’s Glee Club, composed of more than 60 voices, and the Varsity Quartet will present a concert at 3 p.m. Sun day in Schwab Auditorium. Frank Gullo, associate professor of music, is director of the Glee Club and of the Varsity Quartet. The Glee Club dates from 1887, when a student journalist, writing in the Free Lance, prede-j cessor to The Dally Collegian,' Harleysville, Allentown, Waynes commented on the need for a'boro, Westbury, L. 1., N.Y., East Glee Club at the University. jOrange, N.J. and two concerts at A Glee Club was organized] the University. ■with professor George C. Butz, a] , The Varsity Quartet made its graduate and horticulturist for'S?* appearance in 1902 with the the Agricultural Experimental]Q^fla^g^ ltd Station not only directing the medleys between the acts and group, but also singing as a part;also helped out in spots of the of the Club. jmusical There were 11 members includ-j ing Butz, when, in 1888. the Club toured Bellefonte, Huntingdon, Tyrone, Philipsburg. and Clear-! field—all within a 40-mile radius of State College. j In contrast to these early horse-j and-buyy tours, the Glee Club! of 1913 made a coast-to-coast tour,! and in 1928 went to Europe, sing-j ing in London. Oxford, Paris,] Brussels, Antwerp and The > Hague. The Spring tour tradition sprang up in 1920. when the Glee: Club sang in Wilkes-Barre andi Binghamton. N.Y. Last year the] Club appeared in McKeesport,! Pittsburgh, Danville. Baltimore,| Md., Johnstown and York. i This year’s schedule includes] concerts in Philipsburg, Tyrone, THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PI television star. He has ap peared on the Ed Sullivan and Garry Moore Shows. Troubadour will be trans ported in a wagon. Also in the parade are six ponies owned by the Pepsi-Cola company. The team will draw a cart and is patterned after the famous Budweiser team on a minature scale. An oxen team composed of two animals drawing a cart will participate. The team was loaned by the Acadia Farms, Northfield, Ohio, owned by . Cyrus Eaton, owner of the Cleveland and Ohio Railroad. Two other groups in the par ade are a six horse Belgium • team loaned by the Menzie Dairy and a wagon of assorted University livestock. The parade will be led by the State College High School Band and rounded-out by a procesion of six mounted horses. Two clowns will frolic Delta Chi; John Bruno, Lambda Chi Alpha; Guy Tirabassi, Phi Kappa Sigma; Benjamin Amato, Alpha Phi Delta; Lester Walters, Delta Upsilon. Milton Plum, Phi Delta Theta; Richard Frederick, Sigma Phi Al pha; Clair Heckathom, Tau Kap pa Epsilon; Robert Pulver, Delta Tau Delta; John Donahue, Sigma Nu; Douglas Chidlow, Pi Kappa Alpha; Richard Giesecke, Beaver House; William Eberhardt, Al pha Zeta: Michael Vignola, Phi Mu Delta; Ernest Young, Chi Phi; Howard Felt, Phi Epsilon Pi; Brooke Moyer, Sigma PL Richard Moody, Phi Kappa Tau; Richard Boggs, Sigma Chi; David Wilkinson, Kappa Sigma; Ronald Faris, Theta Kappa Phi; Charles Rine, Alpha Gamma Rho; Donald Kauffman, Alpha Chi Sigma; Stanley Hopkins, Pi Kap pa Phi; Edwin Henrie, Sigma Al pha Epsilon; Jack Solomon, Phi Sigma Delta; George Goldstein, Sigma Alpha Mu; William Men digino, Phi Kappa; Theodore Steinman, Zeta Beta Tau; Burt Swerdling, Beta Sigma Rho; James Machlan, Theta Xi; Albert Balkey, Alpha Sigma Phi; John Hixon, Association of Indepen dent Men; William Kane, Kappa Della Rho; Ronald Hall, Delta Sigma Phi. Quartet Concert *CATHAUM Now: 1:46. 3:42, 5:38, 7:34. 9:30 Academy Award Winner —Best Orirmal Screen Story— “THE BRAVE ONE” CinmaScope • Technicolor *NITTANY Now • Doors Open 5:45 p.m. “A Noteworthy Example of Bow a Movie Oath! to bt Pot Together!" —New Yorker “GOLD OF NAPLES” Silrana Minfin* - Tito Sophia Loren * Vittorio DeSld at the end. The year the show is dedi cated to Sally Laughlin, a for mer student at the University who was killed last summer in a plane accident over the Grand Canyon. Miss Laughlin was an active member of the Block and Bridle Club, which sponsors the show. An outstanding animal hus bandry alumnus is honored at the show. This special Cita tion Award will be presented to Jesse Krall. Krall was grad uated from the University in 1920 and is now the manager of Willow Brook Farms at Ca tasauqua, Pa. The animals exhibited in the show tomorrow are owned by the University but are groomed and trained by the students who show them, for eight weeks before the event. There are .117 contestants participating. Junior Given sloolst Prize In Competition Roy Vollmer, junior in archi tecture from Wynne wood, has been awarded the $lOO first prize in the annual Summitville Tile Award competition at the University. The competition, supervised by Philip F. Hallock, professor of architecture, was based on the de sign of a beach park. Second prize of $75 was award ed to Carl Kaufman, junior in architecture from Willow Grove; third prize of $5O to James M. Wehler, junior in architecture from Littlestown; and fourth prize of $25 to Robert Breslin, junior in architectural engineer ing from Bloomingdale. The Summitville Awards were established at the University in 1954 for juniors in architecture or architectural engineering by the Summitville Tiles, Inc., Sum mitville, Ohio. They honor the late Frederick Hursh Johnson, founder of the firm, who was graduated from the University in 1911 with a de gree in sanitary engineering. Prof Receives USAF Grant Dr. Lloyd A. Currie, assistant professor of chemistry, has been awarded a 1-year grant by the Air Research and Development Command of the U.S. Air Force for research on the “The Inter actions of Energetic Nuclei with Chemical Systems.” Dr. Currie plans to study chem ical reactions caused by high en ergy particles produced in nu clear reactions caused by the tritium nucleus which is pro duced by neutrons in the reactor reacting with Lithium-6 nuclei. He will study the chemical re actions caused by the high-energy tritons meeting with hydro-car bons. He hopes that his work will produce new information con cerning the effect of nuclear pro jectiles on chemical systems. ' j Assisting on the project is Rob ert Luce, graduate student from Philadelphia, working for his Ph.D. degree. i • Alaska celebrates a country wide holiday for the opening of the salmon fishing season. ••••••••••• Feat: 1:20, 3:27. 5:24. 7:31, 9:41 INSYLVANIA Dennis Will Be Keynoter At NSA Spring Meeting Lawrence E. Dennis, University vice president for aca demic affairs, will give the keynote speech at the Pennsyl vania-West Virginia Spring Regional Assembly of the United States National Student Association which opens today on campus. His topic will be “Current the theme of the three-day con- ' ference. Dennis will speak at the I plenary session at 3 p.m. in 10 Sparks. Other speakers will be Barbara Hendel, regional chairman, and Robert Steele, All-University president. 90 to Attend About 90 students representing 20 member schools will attend. Steele said yesterday that the University, would send no official delegates. - Edwin Hehrie, junior in pre medicine from Lansdowne, .will serve as coordinator of the confer ence. He said the delegates will be housed in fraternities and in McElwain Hall. Commission meetings will be held from + to 5:30 pun. *today. They are; “Who Should Go to College.” 110 Electrical Engineer ing; “How Can an Institution Safeguard the Quality of its Edu cational Processes While Meeting the Demands of a Higher Enroll ment,” 112 Buckhout; and “How Will Increased Enrollments Af fect Student Life Outside the Classroom,” 121 Sparks. 3 to Participate Three University students will chair the meeting on increased enrollment. They are Steele, Leonard Richards and George Buckhout. A panel discussion on educa tional television will be held at 4:30 p.m.- today in 112 Buckhout. Dr. C. R. Carpenter, director of the University’s instructional re search program, will speak. The meetings will be open to the public. Members of Cabinet have been urged to attend. Sub-commission meetings will be. held from 7 to 8:30 tonight in the same rooms as the commis sion meetings. A coffee hour has been scheduled for 9 to 11 to night in the main lounge of the Hetzel Union Building. Junior Appointed WDFM Manager Richard Schilpp, junior in journalism from Mohnton, has been named new station mana ger of campus radio station WD FM. Other students promoted are: James Barkley, junior in busi ness administration from Punx sutawney, and Robert Zimmer man, junior in journalism from Johnstown, program directors; David Ellis, sophomore in elec trical engineering from Haver town, chief engineer; and Donald Hahn, junior in arts and letters from Hanover, business mana ger. The promotions are effective Wednesday. * v t#*/* r-j, IM ■ \-:c : NOW M. A Players Production Every FrL and Sal S April 5 thru May 18 r CENTER STAGE ° 8:00 P.M. A Tickets Available N at HUB Desk—sl - 4?1~4 See It This Weekend FRIDAY. APRIL 26. 195> Issues in Higher Education," NISA Elects Freshman to Key Office Garl Smith, freshman in chem ical engineering from Scranton, has been elected first vice presi dent of the National Independent Student Association '(NISA). Lorraine Jablonski, sophomore in home economics from West Nanticoke and Leonides presi dent, was selected queen of the association at its annual conven tion held shortly before Easter vacation at the University of Illi nois. In elections for the Northeast region, encompassing Pennsyl vania, New Jersey. New York and New England, Miss Jablon ski was named president; Bruca Keeler, junior in recreation edu cation from Bethlehem, secretary; and James Bosch art, sophomore in business* administration from Chester, treasurer. Smith was named chairman of a committee to reorganize tha national structure of NISA. Tha purpose of the proposed reorgan ization is “making the association stronger by combined unity,” Smith said. 'NISA is at present divided into seven regions, the Northeastern, Eastern, Southeastern, South western, Central, Rocky Moun tain and Pacific Coast. The reorganization may consist in selection of faculty advisors to teach independent organiza tion on the individual campuses, according to Smith. From these, regional advisors will be chosen to work in con junction with national head quarters. Service and Sales •Radios •Car Radios jggk •Phonographs •TV Sets State College TV 232 S. Allen St. WMAJ 1450 wwivlnj Qn Your Dial 6 :30 -. Sign On 6:32 ■ - Morning Show 6:30 _ Morning Devotions 8:45 Morning Show 9:00 Robert Horleigb 10:00 —— ■ - Cecil Brown 10:15 Classical Interlude 11:00 News 11:05 Muaio for Listening 11:15 —i r. A Woman’s Decision 11:30 ■ Queen tor a Day 12:00 - Music At Noon 12:15 ■ Centre County News What’s Going On 12:45 Area Sports 12:50 -------- Strike Up the Band Afternoon of Music Bob & Ray i News 5:45 - Muaio for Listening 6:00 __ World News: market summary 5:15 : Music for Listening 6:30 - Sports Special Fulton Lewis Jr. Frid»r Nlsht 7:20 1 Music 7:40 _______ Social Security 7:45 Stars for Defense 8:00 „- T , , As You Believe—WDFM 8:15 1— Here’s To Veterans 8:20 * Jazs CIub—WDFM 9:00 ■ - -- - Campus News—WDFM 0:15 - ' -- Music of the Masters 10:00 . _■ Groorology 1:00 ' Sign Off World News Swap Shop Local News World News
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers